Estate of Wickes

72 P. 902, 139 Cal. 195, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 798
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1903
DocketS.F. No. 3133.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 72 P. 902 (Estate of Wickes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Wickes, 72 P. 902, 139 Cal. 195, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 798 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

This is a will contest, and from an order admitting the will to prohate contestant appeals.

The general facts are as follows: Olive J. Wickes and Alfred M. Wickes were husband and wife, well advanced in years, childless, and without kindred, direct or collateral. She was possessed of considerable separate property; he had nothing. Both were suffering from incurable disease,—she from cancer, he from paralysis,—and the interval between their respective deaths was short. Prior to his demise he was an inmate of the hospital of the King’s Daughters’ Home for Incurables in San Francisco, where he had been placed by his wife, who had made full, ample, and permanent provision for his comfortable maintenance during the few years he had to live, and for his funeral and burial.

She at the time of her death was an inmate of the Fabiola Hospital, at Oakland, where she died on November 5, 1898, leaving this will in controversy, executed a month prior thereto, whereby she bequeathed her entire property to the proponent, Dr. J. M. Shannon, the attending physician at the hospital, and who had been, both prior and subsequent to her going there, her physician and surgeon, and attending her during her last illness.

Thereafter, and on the twenty-fourth day of December following her death, her husband died at the said home for incurables, leaving a will dated two days before his death, by which he made Mrs. Annette P. Clark, president of said home, his sole legatee. His will was duly admitted to probate, and Mrs. Clark, who was nominated therein as executrix, duly qualified as such.

Mrs. Wickes’s will was subsequently offered for probate by Dr. Shannon in the superior court of San Francisco, and *198 thereupon Mrs. Clark, as residuary legatee under the will of Mr. Wickes, inaugurated this present' contest upon the familiar grounds of mental incapacity of Mrs. Wickes at the time of the execution of her will, and fraud and undue influence exercised by Dr. Shannon, the principal devisee thereunder.

Neither proponent nor contestant are, either by blood or affinity, related to their respective testators, and to the extent that it may be hereafter determined effective, the testamentary disposition in favor of either of them (in the absence of natural claimants) was no doubt actuated, through that generous impulse, which prompts the old and infirm, to reward kindly ministrations and considerate attention in their declining days, by favorable testamentary bequests.

While this fact can make no difference in the right of the parties here, to have applied to this case the general legal principles which control inquiries concerning alleged insanity and undue influence, yet, the fact that they are not the natural recipients of their testator’s bounty, narrows the application of these rules, and removes from consideration perplexing questions with which a will contest is usually fraught, and simplifies our inquiry.

However, we do not entirely escape its presentation, for at the very threshold of this appeal the proponent insists, that the contestant was not entitled to maintain this action in the court below, or to be heard on the appeal here.

Succinctly stated, the point made is, that the right to contest a will which is offered for probate is a personal privilege; that it cannot pass by assignment, and cannot accrue through testamentary transfer; and that Mrs. Clark, being but a testamentary beneficiary under the husband’s will, has neither right nor standing to contest the will of his wife.

Whatever merit there may be in this special point, from the conclusion we reach in the main case, it becomes unnecessary to dispose of it.

As said, the contestant interposes as grounds why the will of Mrs. Wickes should not be allowed probate, both want of testamentary capacity in Mrs. Wickes at the time of making her will, and fraud and undue influence on the part of Dr. Shannon, the beneficiary thereunder, in its procurement.

*199 The contest was tried before the judge of the probate court, a jury having been waived, and from his findings against the contestant on both these issues this appeal is taken. The record in this case is made up of some two hundred and fifty pages, purporting to contain all the testimony in the case, and we have given it careful attention.

There is nothing in it to substantiate, even in a remote degree, the claim that Mrs. Wickes was mentally unsound when the will was' executed. In fact, the evidence tends to show directly the contrary. Various witnesses, persons who were constantly about her, at and about the date of making the will, called by the contestant, presumably on both issues, were not even inquired of concerning her mental capacity. While it is open to some dispute, we do not think that it would be fair to the contestant herself, to understand her as claiming that on October 5th, the date the will was executed, Mrs. Wickes was mentally unsound, because three days later she called on her at the hospital with an attorney to have Mrs. Wickes execute a power of attorney in her favor, which the latter declined to do. On the other hand, many persons, whose opportunities for observation were favorable, testified emphatically upon the subject of her mental capacity at the date involved, in support of it. In fact, our careful examination of the brief of the attorneys for contestant satisfies us that no particular stress is laid upon this claim, the point principally urged being that the will was procured through the undue influence of Dr. Shannon. But, as is said upon' the matter of insanity, we cannot discover any testimony in the record which supports this claim. If we correctly understand the position of counsel expressed in their brief, they do not contend that undue influence was established as a matter of fact, or that any facts were proven which show its existence, but rather claim that, as matter of law, it is presumed from proof of the relationship which the physician occupied to the testatrix at the time the will was made in his favor. They say in this regard: “We are aware that in this case the testimony of Mr. Goldsby, Dr. Shannon, and Dr. Pratt, as matter of form, is sufficient to entitle this will to probate; but we submit that on the ground of public policy their testimony should not be held sufficient.” But insanity and undue influence were the *200 substantive grounds the contestant took against the will, and if the testimony of these witnesses entitled the will to probate, it was because the court must have found they did not exist in fact; it must necessarily have found the converse to be true—that the evidence proved that testamentary capacity and absence from restraint accompanying the execution of the will. Whether evidence.is sufficient to sustain a will, must in all cases mainly depend on the credibility of the witnesses by whom the testimony is offered, and how far credibility should be given to their testimony is to be determined by the judge who heard it. That matter is solely committed to him, and his judgment upon it is conclusive upon us.

In this case the lower court passed on that question. Counsel concedes that, pro forma, the credibility given to the testimony established the will, and our examination of the record satisfies us that it correctly sustained it in point of fact.

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Bluebook (online)
72 P. 902, 139 Cal. 195, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-wickes-cal-1903.